It's a brand new tie dye technique without the mess... and the results are amazing! This activity combines chemistry and art to create a designer t-shirt that is sure to get lots of attention whenever you wear it.
Fill a sink or any container with fresh, clean water.
Now, cut out some cardboard or heavy paper in the shape of a boat.
Make your boat small, about the size of a postage stamp.
Once your boat is cut out, make a small notch in the back.
Put a small dab of soap in the notch.
Set your boat in the water and watch it speed around!
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Scientific Principle at Work Surface tension represents the way liquids, like water and vegetable oil, act when they are mixed together. Surface tension is measured by scientists in a unit called “dynes” per centimeter. Tension is created by the attraction of molecules toward the interior.
Soap has molecules that are designed by chemists to dissolve in water. The action of dissolving reduces surface tension mixing soap molecules among the water molecules on the surface of the water. As the soap dissolves in the water, it creates a force that moves the boat forward.
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Competing Water Drops Experiment
Procedure
Find two identical drinking straws.
Fill two glasses with some fresh water. Mix a squirt of dish soap into one of the glasses.
Using both hands, lower the two straws into the two glasses at the same time.
Next, covering the top openings with your thumbs, lift the two straws out of the glass and watch what happens.
You will notice that the straw that was placed in the soapy water has smaller droplets of water that drip off of it while the straw in the plain water makes larger drops.
Scientific Principle at Work
Dynamic surface tension measures the attraction or “strength” between molecules in the liquid. The surface tension governs how much weight a drop of water can hold before it is too heavy and falls off the straw. Reducing the surface tension by adding soap means only smaller drops of water can form before falling off.
What’s in My Trash?
More waste is being produced per person than ever, although it is leveling off. According to the U.S. Environmental
trash can
Protection Agency, in 1960 about 2.7 pounds of trash were discarded per person per day. That figure has now grown to 4.6 pounds. Much of the increase is a result of socioeconomic factors. The amount of waste discarded per person can be influenced by the size of the household, income, degree of urbanization, geographic location, season, number of working adults, and other lifestyle factors.
Of note is the change in the American household or family structure over the past 30 years, and the impact it has had on our trash problem. The increasing breakup of the nuclear or traditional family has led not only to more households, but also to a duplication of services, goods, and appliances to sustain them.
During this same period, American families increasingly have shifted from one-income to two-income households. This trend has helped to create an increasing reliance on single use and disposable convenience items. For good or bad, convenience is a fact of our current lifestyle. Procedure
As a class, brainstorm a list of possible items that a student could throw into the trash on a typical day, not only at home, but also at school. In generating this list, students should be reminded to think of different categories of trash: paper, plastic, yard trimmings, metals, rubber/leather, textiles, wood, food, aluminum, glass, and “other.” A class recorder should compile the list in a word document or on paper.
Duplicate this class list. This will be the Trash Inventory Checklist. Require each student to monitor his or her discard for one day. Students should use the list to check off the items they throw away, noting the number of each. Students should also note any discarded items that are not on the list.
The day after students complete their inventories, ask them to analyze the results and think about how the data reflects their personal habits and lifestyles. Have each student write an essay that answers this question: “It is 100 years from now and your home is the site of an archeological dig. What would the archeologist conclude if all your daily discards were found in a pile?” A possible prompt for student is, “If archaeologists found my trash, they would conclude…about me… because…”
Questions
Analyze factors that could cause variations between student inventories. Use these questions as prompts for discussion or writing.
a. Would your trash inventory be the same every day of the year? Explain. b. How would holidays or birthdays affect your trash? c. Would an archaeologist know what season of the year your trash was from? How? d. Would most of your neighbors’ garbage be similar? e. Explain how each of the following factors could affect the amount and kinds of household trash:
A baby or very young children
A house with a small yard on a city lot
A house with a large lawn in the suburbs
A rural farm with animals and fields
A house/apartment with very little storage space
A family of one parent and one child
A family of two parents and four children
A garden to supply vegetables and fruits
A region that is warm all year
Not having a microwave oven
Having a very large income
A family with two working parents
f. How does reliance on convenience products seem to affect waste?
Suggestions
Ask students to write and share responses to the question: If you were asked to reduce the amount of waste you produced, what would you do and how would it make a difference?
Have students look at their inventory sheets and answer these questions: How many bags of trash do you think you produce in a day? In a year? How big an area would those bags fill? How many bags would everyone in your class produce in a year?
Project Summary
Content Areas
Objectives
Students will…
Time
•
Social Studies
Population, family structure, geography
•
Science
Solid waste, data analysis, drawing inferences, supporting conclusions
•
Writing
•
Become aware of the amount and kinds of trash they personally generate in a day
•
Infer how both the types and amounts of household trash could differ because of family makeup, lifestyle, geography, and season
It's a brand new tie dye technique without the mess... and the results are amazing! This activity combines chemistry and art to create a designer t-shirt that is sure to get lots of attention whenever you wear it.
Materials
EGG IN A BOTTLE
EXPERIMENTING WITH CORNSTARCH
Toy Boat Experiment
Soap has molecules that are designed by chemists to dissolve in water. The action of dissolving reduces surface tension mixing soap molecules among the water molecules on the surface of the water. As the soap dissolves in the water, it creates a force that moves the boat forward.
Competing Water Drops Experiment
Procedure- Find two identical drinking straws.
- Fill two glasses with some fresh water. Mix a squirt of dish soap into one of the glasses.
- Using both hands, lower the two straws into the two glasses at the same time.
- Next, covering the top openings with your thumbs, lift the two straws out of the glass and watch what happens.
- You will notice that the straw that was placed in the soapy water has smaller droplets of water that drip off of it while the straw in the plain water makes larger drops.
Scientific Principle at WorkDynamic surface tension measures the attraction or “strength” between molecules in the liquid. The surface tension governs how much weight a drop of water can hold before it is too heavy and falls off the straw. Reducing the surface tension by adding soap means only smaller drops of water can form before falling off.
What’s in My Trash?
More waste is being produced per person than ever, although it is leveling off. According to the U.S. EnvironmentalOf note is the change in the American household or family structure over the past 30 years, and the impact it has had on our trash problem. The increasing breakup of the nuclear or traditional family has led not only to more households, but also to a duplication of services, goods, and appliances to sustain them.
During this same period, American families increasingly have shifted from one-income to two-income households. This trend has helped to create an increasing reliance on single use and disposable convenience items. For good or bad, convenience is a fact of our current lifestyle.
Procedure
- As a class, brainstorm a list of possible items that a student could throw into the trash on a typical day, not only at home, but also at school. In generating this list, students should be reminded to think of different categories of trash: paper, plastic, yard trimmings, metals, rubber/leather, textiles, wood, food, aluminum, glass, and “other.” A class recorder should compile the list in a word document or on paper.
- Duplicate this class list. This will be the Trash Inventory Checklist. Require each student to monitor his or her discard for one day. Students should use the list to check off the items they throw away, noting the number of each. Students should also note any discarded items that are not on the list.
- The day after students complete their inventories, ask them to analyze the results and think about how the data reflects their personal habits and lifestyles. Have each student write an essay that answers this question: “It is 100 years from now and your home is the site of an archeological dig. What would the archeologist conclude if all your daily discards were found in a pile?” A possible prompt for student is, “If archaeologists found my trash, they would conclude…about me… because…”
QuestionsAnalyze factors that could cause variations between student inventories. Use these questions as prompts for discussion or writing.
a. Would your trash inventory be the same every day of the year? Explain.
b. How would holidays or birthdays affect your trash?
c. Would an archaeologist know what season of the year your trash was from? How?
d. Would most of your neighbors’ garbage be similar?
e. Explain how each of the following factors could affect the amount and kinds of household trash:
- A baby or very young children
- A house with a small yard on a city lot
- A house with a large lawn in the suburbs
- A rural farm with animals and fields
- A house/apartment with very little storage space
- A family of one parent and one child
- A family of two parents and four children
- A garden to supply vegetables and fruits
- A region that is warm all year
- Not having a microwave oven
- Having a very large income
- A family with two working parents
f. How does reliance on convenience products seem to affect waste?Suggestions
- Ask students to write and share responses to the question: If you were asked to reduce the amount of waste you produced, what would you do and how would it make a difference?
- Have students look at their inventory sheets and answer these questions: How many bags of trash do you think you produce in a day? In a year? How big an area would those bags fill? How many bags would everyone in your class produce in a year?
Project SummaryStudents will…
Population, family structure, geography
Solid waste, data analysis, drawing inferences, supporting conclusions